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I'd like to encode a string from "UTF-8" to "cp1252" with JavaScript.

I have an HTML document sent as utf-8, and in that document there is a hidden field keep the JsonString which contain "UTF-8" characters such as "二". My Java Bean doesn't receive the correct value on the server-side, it gets "?".

    <h:inputHidden id="hiddenPropertiesValues" 
        value="#{Bean.newProperties}"/>

Java Bean class sscce

    public void setNewProperties( String newProperties ) {
        this.newProperties = newProperties;
    }

I tried to trans-code the JsonString to "cp1252" by java code first. And then input the trans-coded JsonString to the hidden field. The Bean can get the correct characters.

So I thought I can solve this problem by encoding the string from "UTF-8" to "cp1252" with JavaScript.

Both of the Html and the Java Bean files use "UTF-8".

5
  • Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/2283829/…
    – user529758
    Dec 25, 2012 at 8:57
  • What exactly do you want to do with the result? Dec 25, 2012 at 9:18
  • @Pumbaa80 If there is a String str = "二"; which is encode "UTF-8".I want to transcode it to "ISO8859_1". Then it will show as some strange string.
    – cindy
    Dec 25, 2012 at 9:27
  • It is really hard to answer your question if we have to guess what's happening. So I think you have an HTML document sent as utf-8, and in that document you are creating a form with JS, which should be sent as iso8859-1. In that form, there should be a hidden field that is given some value by JS. But when you assign "二", your Java Bean does not recieve the correct value on the server-side. Is that it? If so, please update your question. Dec 25, 2012 at 9:39
  • 1
    ISO-8859 cannot encode the character "二".
    – deceze
    Dec 25, 2012 at 12:32

1 Answer 1

2

First, it is not possible to do so, because Unicode contains way more characters than ISO8859-1.

Second, you should (almost) never need to worry about encodings, since the browser handles that for you. Internally, JS always uses UTF-16, no matter what the document encoding is. When you use document.write or DOM manipulation, and when a form requires a certain encoding, the browser will take care of converting.

I think what you really should do is improve your server-side implementation and switch to UTF-8 there.

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  • Thank you very much. I'll check my Java Bean file.
    – cindy
    Dec 25, 2012 at 12:28
  • If you're running Tomcat, you also need to check your server config there. Dec 25, 2012 at 17:43
  • Yes, I'll pay attention to that. Thank you for your kind reminding.
    – cindy
    Dec 26, 2012 at 1:50

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